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Science & Technology
Difference Engine: Phones up in the air
2013-01-21
I ran across this article in the Economist which answered a question that had been nagging me; why are cell phones banned on airplanes during flight?

The usual reason given is that the transmitters might interfere with the aircraft's avionics. "Both Airbus and Boeing have bombarded their aircraft with electromagnetic radiation at frequencies and power levels used by mobile phones, only to come away empty handed."
There goes my plan to use my cell phone as a last ditch weapon against hijackers.
The real reason? Cell phone towers.

Cell phone networks assume that, at any given moment, a mobile phone is within range of only one or two nearby towers. Each tower uses a set of channels different from those allocated to the towers closest to it, but the same as other towers further away. This allows each channel to be reused to carry calls from multiple users.

But a cell phone operating in an aircraft flying overhead might be within reach of any number of towers using the same channels. Compounding this is that an airborne phone would be moving too fast across the sky for the ground-based network to respond.

This would wreck havoc on a mobile network.

Who knew?
Posted by:Mike Ramsey

#7  Another reason to improve TESLAN + AIRSHIP TECHS + CAPABILITIES.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2013-01-21 23:39  

#6  Had people flying in airplanes on 911 not used their cell phones, we might not have known exactly what was going on as quickly as we did.

JohQC,
Which was a good thing.

The article didn't say that a call wouldn't work, just that the network might be inundated with connect requests and otherwise be trashed.
Posted by: Mike Ramsey   2013-01-21 21:07  

#5  Had people flying in airplanes on 911 not used their cell phones, we might not have known exactly what was going on as quickly as we did.
Posted by: JohnQC   2013-01-21 17:46  

#4  I'd guessed something along P2K; a security problem wrapped in a pretty bow.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2013-01-21 16:35  

#3  Compounding this is that an airborne phone would be moving too fast across the sky for the ground-based network to respond.

..or to be traced?
Posted by: Procopius2k   2013-01-21 15:47  

#2  The cell phone: A little known use.
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-01-21 15:14  

#1  Not our problem.
Fix it.
Posted by: Snakes Chavitch8940   2013-01-21 15:08  

00:00